Evening Star Newspaper, March 20, 1930, Page 35

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FREEFAREURGED BYPUPLS FATHER Boon for $1,500-a-Year U. S. Employe With Wife and Sister in Ukrainia Seeks Sum Soldier Left Her in 1912 Lack of Piplomatic Re- lations With Russia Be- lieved Cause for Delay. THE EYENING SLAYER OF 3 T0 DIE BEFORE RIFLE SQUAD Man Who Killed Wife and Her Parents Chooses Death by Shooting. By the Assoclated Press. SALT LAKE CITY, March 20—The STAR, WASHINGTON, confessed slayer of his wife, her'mother, and her stepfather. Green yesterday chose this mode of death when offered his choice of death by shooting or hanging, in accordance with State laws, He appeared unmoved at the question and selected the firing squad, as have most of the approxi- mately 30 prisoners given such prefer- ence since the passage of the legislation. Execution was set for May 17 by Dis- trict Judge Eugene E4Pratt. Previously the judge passed the death sentence, which was mandatory, and overruled a motion for a new tria = Because of their success in locating D. BLIZZARD SWEEPS C., THURSDAY, MARCH 20, damisge ‘I Eastern Washin N Tdaho, e e Near Mon!f led over into the were NORTHWEST STATES |Bilcine: Snow and Zero Weather Hit Mon- tana as Gale Causes Heavy Damage. By the Assoclated Press. SPO KANE, Wash., March 20.—8wirl- ing snow and zero weather in Montana e Westimytin stern. Wasl and Northern Idaho' reported power lines swept to the ground, temporarily cutting off service. Farming operations in Southeastern V;ldlhl'nmn were halted by great clouds of dust. In Lewiston, Mont., the mercury nose- dived 50 degrees and dropped to zero. ‘The cold wave was expected to con- tinue in Montana and Wyoming until tomorrow. U. S. NARCOTIC AGENT IS SOUGHT BY ‘CANADA' Dominion Asks Extradition of Man Facing Murder Charge as Re- G sult of Border Fray. By the Associated Press. GALVESTON, Tex., March 20.—Exact t, charged with the Dominion t seeks ex- tradition of Mertz to. Canada, there to stand trial. Bilodeau was shot and killed in May, 1925, while Mertz was employed as a United States narcotic agent on the border. itions read . at .the hearing, which began yesterday, asserted the shooting occurred about 300 feet over th:‘N;tl;der lln': Ilrl'.Olnldl. lertz also is charged with kidna) Robert A. Price, companion of Blhfilfl‘, eral narcotic af murder of the ‘The location of a shooting affray in which | and the theft of an automobile belong- ing t: Mrs. Adepphine Begin, Bilodeau's Amadee Bilodeau of Sherbrooke, Can-| & ada, was killed was the point of con- firing squad at the Utah State Prison today faced another gruesome task, the execution of Delbert Green, 21-year-old shoals during the last two herring sea- sons off Iceland, seaplanes are to be permanently used in the fisheries. The finance officer of the United States Soldiers' Home here has been holding $248.28 since January 16, 1912, when Sam Gietes, an American soldier, died, because no effort had been made his will which was filed in 5 sole beneficiary of the will Mrs. Zusia Shmulevna Chechelnik, Ukrainia, and the lack of diplomatic relations with Russia may b: responsible for the delay. Attorney David Weiner asked the District Supreme Court to admit the will to probate and to issue letters to him so that he might collect the money and forward it to the sister. He tells the court that he has been di- rec[!‘:md by the sister to make the appli- cation. Gietes, whose name in the Russian anguage was Shlema’ Slmulev Gitis, died at Fort Bayard, New Mexico, where h}l will was probated in the presence of three other enlisted men. All these witness have died, the court is told, and Attorneiv‘ ‘Weiner asks the court to re- quest the War Department to aid in turnishing secondary préof of the will's execution by comparison of the records of the department with the signatures of the witnesses. FILM EXECUTIVE WEDS ‘William Goetz Is Married to Edith Mayer at Los Angeles. LOS ANGELES, March 20 (P)— Edith Mayer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. Mayer, was ' married last night to William Goetz, motion picture ex- ecutive. The ceremony was performed by Rabbi Edgar Magnin under a canopy of roped flowers in the ball room of the Biltmore Hotel. Bridesmaids were Marion Davies, Corinne Griffith, May McAvoy, Bessie Love, Carmel Myers and Catherine Ben- net. The bride's sister, Irene Mayer, was maid of honor and Benjamin Goetz, brosher of the bridegroom, acted as best man. Four Children. has arrived hand in hand with gale-like windstorms that have done extensive Nearly 2,000,000 tons of rice were |tention Tuesday in the extradition A sa recently caught off produced in Manchuria last year, hearings of Fred Merts, Houston Fed- D TR € wfish South Africa, was 14 feet 6 inches long. “The plight of a Government employe after 12 years service, trying to support @ wife and four children on a salary of $1,600 when the Department of La- bor says $2,500 is the minimum on which a family of five can decently live is told in a letter received today by Acting Chairman McLeod of the House District committee, in which the writer, who wishes to withhold his identity, tells what free carfare for school children would mean in his fam- ‘With 48 cents a day for carfare, and 25 cents a week for milk in school for the younger children and text books to buy for the oldest, who is in high school, | |, the pennies have to be counted closely father who is often compelled to walk 42 blocks to and from his work in good weather so that his children may ride in stormy weather. Free Transportation Plea. Calling attention to the plea made by Johr. J. Noonan for fre: transporta- tion of school children in connec- tion with the pending legislation [or & merger of the street car and | bus companies, the writer of the letter said it is “an apgeal which is not unreasonable and would cer- inly not involve very great financial loss to the street railway companies o. merged concern, yet which would prove of very material saving to the hundreds of parents of limited means, whose children must travel to and from school on the cars. Using his own situation as an illus- tration of what a boon free transporta- tion for school children would be, this Government employe writes as follows: Children Must Ride. ‘Take my own case as an illustra-‘ tion of hundreds in similar circum- stances. I am a setiled permanent res- ident of the Capital City and have been employed as a first grade clerk in the U. 8. Treasury Department, Bureau of Customs for the past 12 years. I have a | wife Td four children, aged 1, 7, 13 and 15, “respectively, and despite the fact that I have met every qualification, legal, mental, moral and physical, of the | U. 8. civil service as clerk, yet today I receive less than many mes- and laborers, namely $1500 a year. Three of my children each in dif- ferent schools, and two must ride the yesterday Campbell’s or Quaker Maid Beans 3 Cans 25¢ Introducing~! Sunnyfield Self-Rising Flour to the §.1b. 22 c I:;,: 48 c 24.1b. 9 5 c Bag Fancy Creamery )\ \ Wildmere Fresh BUTTER L. 43¢ 27¢ ; Sunnyfield Print....Ib, 47¢ A Worthy é‘m’ln' ///fl//l//llllll”“lliIIIlI\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ Popular Sunnyfi Family Flour American Cheese aged a little for flavor L. 20¢ Encore Brand Macaroni And Spaghetti 3 . 19€ Carton of 12 Sunnybrooks les my own fare | younger ones must have | 25 cents a week for milk while the old- | one in high school must be fur-| with text books also. “We live about 42 blocks from my work in the suburbs and I must fre- Nothing like it to Clean Aluminum Women who have used $.0.S sy \ “We can’t keep house * IN OUR -y MEAT MARKETS 0 extra soap to bother with.” . Fancy ~ Rib Roast - 33 Tendéi Fanc, Chuck |3-Corner Roast | Roast L. 23€¢ | Lb. 29¢ Fresh Ground Hamburg. . Tender Beef Liver....... Lean Stewing Lamb... Select Veal Cutlets.... Swift’s Premium Hams. . Auth’s Smoked Sausage. FRESH FISH Chesapeake Bay Buck Shad L. 25¢€ Roe Shad . Fresh Trout Fresh Herring. . Sliced Halibut . .... 29¢ Fillet of Haddock .Ib, 23¢ Standard Oysters, pt. 35¢; qt. 65¢ Select Oysters. .pt. 40c; qt. 75¢ New Opening Tomorrow Our Newest Combination Grocery, Meat and Produce Market 1024 Ninth Street N.W. On the Southwest Corner of Ninth end L Streets OPEN FOR INSPECTION TONIGHT—7 to 10 Smoked Hams . 2§¢ Pure Lard 2 ue. 25¢ Granulated Sugar 10 ..%..49¢ Orienta Coffee Pound 42@ Pure Fruit Preserves ' :25¢::39¢ Old Dutch Cleanser 2 cx 13¢ Star and P& G Soap 6 cs 25¢ Del Monte Corn Del Monte Peas .. Del Monte Spinach. . Green Lima Beans.. Sweet Sugar Corn. Cut String Beans......... Standard Quality Tomatoes Carrots and Peas.......... Comet Brown Rice Flakes. Shredded Wheat........coc0veens Wheatena, the whole wheat cereal. Quaker Oats, quick or regular Crispo Ginger Snaps ......... ... Ib., 10¢ Cantrell & Cochrane’s C & C Ginger Ale. . .2 bottles, 25¢ Eagle Milk Can 19c In all grocery stores and meat markets Bulk or Package Pat. Jan. 15. 1910~ Rex. U. 8. Pat. OR. Greatest money’s worth! S-crop Boscul Coffee 1.16. Jar 2 cans, 29¢ . 3 cans, 49¢ can, 14¢; 17¢ . No. 2 canm, 14¢ ..med. can, 10¢ ..med. can, 10c ... med. can, 10¢c .2 med. cans, 25¢ .. pkg. 10¢ 2 pkgs., 19¢ « o+ PKge 22¢ eeeess.lb., 35¢ 30 astingly fre> Dayton, O. Rechester,N.Y. ; I‘l Steamed Lobsters Each 25c 25¢ 10¢ Hot Cross Buns —In All Stores Wed. and Fri. During Lent HOSTESS and RICE'S GenerslBang Co. 9% 2 §€} 12 o, 15¢ Sweetened Condensed Smoother, Clearer Skin in 8 hours! NURSES TEEL HOW TO HAVE IT VER 4,000,000 women today are using a new kind of cream that refines and beautifies complex- ions overnight. Nurses first dis- covered this successful beauty treat- ment. “It's not like any other beauty preparation” & New Jersey nurse says. “It's a bealing toilet cream containing gentle medication and Oriental oils That soften the skin, clear away blemishes and shrink ge pores. You massage it into the skin at night before going to bed. Leave it on overnight. In the morn- m notice how much softer, clearer smoother your skin is. The re- sults are simply marvelous. Prac- tically all the nurses at the hospital now, use Noxzema Cream.” LENTEN SUGGES TIONS A New and Better Jar for FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES Prince Edward Island Cobbler Potatoes A new low price on white potatoes—and offered mow in a convenient 90-1b. bag. 10 = 35¢ Original 90b. Bag, 5290 | BANANAS Campbell’s Tomato Soup, 3 cans 25¢ Comet Rice iton, ......3 pkgs. 25¢ Black-Eye Peas..........2 Ibs. 25¢! Tidewater Herring Roe ... can 25¢ Col. River Salmon....7-0z, can 29¢ Light-meat Tuna Fish.7-0z. can 20¢ .Sea Garden Shrimp........jJar 32¢ Blue Peter Sardines.....2 cans 23¢ Idaho Baking Potatoes ...5 Ibs. 25¢ Yellow Onions ...........41bs. 15¢ Sweet Potatoes..........41bs. 19c Crisp Florida Celery....... jm 12¢ Fresh Bunch Carrots. ... ..Bunch, 5¢ New Crop Cabbage.........Lb., 9¢ Rome Beauty Apples.. ... .3 Ibs. 25¢ Boxed Winesap Apples: .. .3 Ibs. 29¢ You'll really be amazed to see what a change Noxzema Cream can make in your skin. It refines skin noticeably overnight, and that is but a beginning of the new besuty it brings. Most skins are a little coarse- textured, blemished or have some small flaws that keep them from being truly beautiful. Noxzema cortects these faults and leaves the skin clear, fresh, satin-smooth— glowing with loveliness. Follow the advice that so many nurses give. Try Noxzema tonight ~—if you can’t notice a big improvemens in the sexture of your skin in the morn- i ist will refund the cast %tzr%u jar of Noxzema ¢ today—at any drug store. r——q L X Y =y SPECIAL INTRO- DUCTORY PRICE 39 7~ GELFANDS Encore Prepared ‘Spaghetti 3 Cans 25¢ Fancy, Large, Ripe Dozen 2§¢ ?“"H- i

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